We must now leave, for the time being, these dark happenings in the Punjab.
The Congress inquiry into Dyerism in the Punjab had just commenced,
when I received a letter of invitation to be present at a joint
conference of Hindus and Musalmans that was to meet at Delhi to
deliberate on the Khilafat question. Among the signatories to it
were the late Hakim Ajmal Khan Saheb and Mr. Asaf Ali. The late
Swami Shraddhanandji, it was stated, would be attending and, if I
remember aright, he was to be the vice-president of the conference,
which, so far as I can recollect, was to be held in the November of
that year. The Conference was to deliberate on the situation arising
out of the Khilafat betrayal, and on the question as to whether the
Hindus and Musalmans should take any part in the peace celebrations.
The letter of invitation went on to say, among other things, that
not only the Khilafat question but the question of cow protection as
well would be discussed at the conference, and it would, therefore,
afford a golden opportunity for a settlement of the cow question. I did
not like this reference to the cow question. In my letter in reply
to the invitation, therefore, whilst promising to do my best to
attend, I suggested that the two questions should not be mixed up
together or considered in the spirit of a bargain, but should be
decided on their own merits and treated separately.
With these thoughts filling my mind, I went to the conference. It
was a very well attended gathering, though it did not present the
spectacle of later gatherings that were attended by tens of
thousands. I discussed the question referred to above with the late
Swami Shraddhanandji, who was present at the conference. He
appreciated my argument and left it to me to place it before the
conference. I likewise discussed it with the late Hakim Saheb.
Before the conference I contended that, if the Khilafat question had
a just and legitimate basis, as I believe it had, and if the
Government had really committed a gross injustice, the Hindus were
bound to stand by the Musalmans in their demand for the redress of
the Khilafat wrong. It would ill become them to bring in the cow
question in this connection, or to use the occasion to make terms
with the Musalmans, just as it would ill become the Musalmans to
offer to stop cow slaughter as a price for the Hindus' support on
the Khilafat question. But it would be another matter and quite
graceful, and reflect great credit on them, if the Musalmans of
their own free will stopped cow slaughter out of regard for the
religious sentiments of the Hindus, and from a sense of duty towards
them as neighbours and children of the same soil. To take up such an
independent attitude was, I contended, their duty, and would enhance
the dignity of their conduct. But if the Musalmans considered it as
their neighbourly duty to stop cow slaughter, they should do so
regardless of whether the Hindus helped them in the Khilafat or not.
'That being so,' I argued, 'the two questions should be discussed
independently of each other, and the deliberations of the conference
should be confined to the question of the Khilafat only.' My
argument appealed to those present and, as a result, the question of
cow protection was not discussed at this conference.
But in spite of my warning Maulana Abdul Bari Saheb said: 'No matter
whether the Hindus help us or not, the Musalmans ought, as the
countrymen of the Hindus, out of regard for the latter's
susceptibilities, to give up cow slaughter.' And at one time it
almost looked as if they would really put an end to it.
There was a suggestion from some quarters that the Punjab question
should be tacked on to that of the Khilafat wrong. I opposed the
proposal. The Punjab question, I said, was a local affair and could
not therefore weigh with us in our decision to participate or not in
the peace celebrations. If we mixed up the local question with the
Khilafat question, which arose directly out of the peace terms, we
should be guilty of a serious indiscretion. My argument easily
carried conviction.
Maulana Hasrat Mohani was present in this meeting. I had known him
even before, but it was only here that I discovered what a fighter
he was. We differed from each other almost from the very beginning,
and in several matters the differences have persisted.
Among the numerous resolutions that were passed at this conference,
one called upon both Hindus and Musalmans to take the Swadeshi vow,
and as a natural corollary to it, to boycott foreign goods. Khadi
had not as yet found its proper place. This was not a resolution
that Hasrat Saheb would accept. His object was to wreak vengeance on
the British Empire in case justice was denied in the matter of the
Khilafat. Accordingly, he brought in a counter proposal
for the boycott purely of British goods so far as practicable. I
opposed it on the score of principle, as also of practicability,
adducing for it those arguments that have now become pretty
familiar. I also put before the conference my view-point of
non-violence. I noticed that my arguments made a deep impression on
the audience. Before me, Hasrat Mohani's speech had been received
with such loud acclamations that I was afraid that mine would only
be a cry in the wilderness. I had made bold to speak only because I
felt it would be a dereliction of duty not to lay my views before
the conference. But, to my agreeable surprise, my speech was
followed with the closest attention by those present, and evoked a
full measure of support among those on the platform, and speaker
after speaker rose to deliver speeches in support of my views. The
leaders were able to see that not only would the boycott of British
goods fail of its purpose, but would, if adopted, make of them a
laughing stock. There was hardly a man present in that assembly but
had some article of British manufacture on his person. Many of the
audience therefore realized that nothing but harm could result from
adopting a resolution that even those who voted for it were unable
to carry out.
'Mere boycott of foreign cloth cannot satisfy us, for who knows long
it will be, before we shall be able to manufacture Swadeshi cloth in
sufficient quantity for our needs, and before we can bring about
effective boycott of foreign cloth? We want something that will
produce an immediate effect on the British. Let your boycott of
foreign cloth stand, we do not mind it, but give us something
quicker, and speedier in addition' – so spoke in effect Maulana
Hasrat Mohani. Even as I was listening to him, I felt that something
new, over and above boycott of foreign cloth, would be necessary. An
immediate boycott of foreign cloth seemed to me also to be a clear
impossibility at that time. I did not then know that we could, if we
liked, produce enough khadi for all our clothing requirements; this
was only a later discovery. On the other hand, I knew even then
that, if we depended on the mills alone for effecting the boycott of
foreign cloth, we should be betrayed. I was still in the middle of
this dilemma when the Maulana concluded his speech.
I was
handicapped for want of suitable Hindi or Urdu words. This was my
first occasion for delivering an argumentative speech before an
audience especially composed of Musalmans of the North. I had spoken
in Urdu at the Muslim League at Calcutta, but it was only for a few
minutes, and the speech was intended only to be a feeling appeal to
the audience. Here, on the contrary, I was faced with a critical, if
not hostile audience, to whom I had to explain and bring home my
viewpoint. But I had cast aside all shyness. I was not there to
deliver an address in the faultless, polished Urdu of the Delhi
Muslims, but to place before the gathering my views in such broken
Hindi as I could command. And in this I was successful. This meeting
afforded me a direct proof of the fact that Hindi-Urdu alone could
become the lingua franca of India. Had I spoken in English, I
could not have produced the impression that I did on the audience,
and the Maulana might not have felt called upon to deliver his
challenge. Nor, if he had delivered it, could I have taken it up
effectively.
I could not hit upon a suitable Hindi or Urdu word for the new idea,
and that put me out somewhat. At last I described it by the word
'non-co-operation,' an expression that I used for the first time at
this meeting. As the Maulana was delivering his speech, it seemed to
me that it was vain for him to talk about effective resistance to a
Government with which he was co-operating in more than one thing, if
resort to arms was impossible or undesirable. The only true
resistance to the Government, it therefore seemed to me, was to
cease to co-operate with it. Thus I arrived at the word
non-co-operation. I had not then a clear idea of all its manifold
implications. I therefore did not enter into details. I simply said:
'The Musalmans have adopted a very important resolution. If the
peace terms are unfavourable to them – which may God forbid –
they will stop all co-operation with Government. It is an inalienable
right of the people thus to withhold co-operation. We are not bound
to retain Government titles and honours, or to continue in
Government service. If Government should betray us in a great cause
like the Khilafat, we could not do otherwise than non-co-operate. We
are therefore entitled to non-co-operate with Government in case of
a betrayal.'
But months elapsed before the word non-co-operation became current
coin. For the time being it was lost in the proceedings of the
conference. Indeed when I supported the co-operation resolution at
the Congress which met at Amritsar a month later, I did so in the
hope that the betrayal would never come.